2025 Heat Spike Signals Accelerating Global Warming, Scientists Warn

‍ ⁤ ⁣ ​ ⁤A man rinses with water in August ⁣after playing beach footvolley on the Ramlet al-Baida public⁤ beach in Beirut, Lebanon,, on a sweltering hot day.
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‍ ‍ Bilal Hussein/AP
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‌⁤ ⁤ ​ ​ Bilal Hussein/AP

WASHINGTON — Earth’s average temperature⁤ last⁤ year hovered among one ‍of the three hottest on record, while ‌the past three years indicate that warming could be ‌speeding up, international climate monitoring teams⁢ reported.

Six science teams calculated that 2025 was behind 2024 and 2023, while two other‌ groups — NASA and a joint American and ​British team — said 2025 was slightly‌ warmer than 2023. ⁣World​ Meteorological Organization, NASA and the‍ National Oceanic and Atmospheric Management‍ officials said 2023⁤ and 2025 temperatures were so close — .04⁣ degrees Fahrenheit apart ‍— that it’s pretty much a ‍tie.

Last year’s average global temperature was 59.14 degrees fahrenheit,⁣ which ⁢is 2.59 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than pre-industrial time,the World Meteorological Organization calculated,averaging ⁤out the⁢ eight data sets. ⁢The temperature data⁢ used by most of the ‍teams goes back to 1850.

All ‌of the ‍last three years ⁣flirted close to the ⁢internationally agreed-upon limit of ​2.7 degrees Fahrenheit of warming ‍as the ⁤mid‍ 19th⁢ century. ‌That goal for limiting temperature‍ increases, established in paris ⁢in 2015, ⁤is highly likely to ⁣be breached by the end of this decade, the scientists said.

When charted on a ⁢graph, 2023, 2024 and 2025⁤ “seemed to jump up,” said NOAA climate monitoring chief Russ Vose. ‍When averaged together, those three years shoot above the 2.7-degree‌ mark, according to⁢ the ‌European climate ⁤service Copernicus.

Rising global temperatures intensify heat waves and other extreme weather, endangering people and causing billions of ‍dollars in damage. The weather monitoring⁤ teams warn that the 2025 temperature increase‍ is a dangerous sign‌ of worsening storms,‍ heat, floods and fires.

Earth is warming at⁣ a faster rate

The ⁤last ⁣11‍ years have been‍ the⁢ hottest 11 ‍years ⁢on record, the climate monitoring groups found.

“The last three years are indicative of​ an acceleration in the​ warming.They’re ⁤not consistent with the linear trend⁤ that we’ve been ⁢observing for the⁤ 50 years before​ that,” said Robert Rohde, chief scientist at ⁢the Berkeley ​Earth ​monitoring group.

While Rohde said nearly‌ all of the warming is from human-caused emissions⁣ of greenhouse gases, the past three years’ temperatures ⁢had a‍ boost from a combination of less ⁤soot ​pollution from ships that normally has a cooling effect, ⁤peak solar activity and perhaps a​ 2022 underwater volcano eruption.

Samantha Burgess, strategic‌ climate lead of the Copernicus service, said the ⁣overwhelming culprit is ⁣clear: the ⁢burning of coal, oil and natural gas.

“Climate change is happening.It’s here. It’s impacting everyone all around the world and it’s our fault,” Burgess told The Associated Press.

Three teams — including NOAA and NASA — reported their ⁣data Wednesday, while the other teams released their information late Tuesday. Copernicus and Japan use a combination of satellite data and computer simulations, while the rest of the groups use ground and ​sea observations. The eight ‌data sets ‌were within less than a tenth of a⁣ degree apart.

Northern Illinois University meteorology professor⁤ Victor ‍Gensini,who was not part of any of the teams,called what’s happening “another warning shot” of a shifting climate “where ‌record/near-record global temperatures are the norm,not the exception.”

⁢ ‌ ‌ Paramedics provide aid July‍ 1 to tourists and residents with an ambulance next to‍ the ancient Spanish ​Steps in‌ Rome, Italy.
⁤ ‌ ‌ ‍ ⁤Andrew Medichini/AP
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‍ Andrew Medichini/AP

Higher ​temperatures ⁤endanger people

Burgess noted numerous heat waves ⁤in 2025 that ⁣broke‍ local or national temperature records, also having notable affects on people’s bodies.

“When⁢ we look ⁣at a warmer ‍world, we know that extreme events become more frequent and more intense,” Burgess said, mentioning 2025’s Los Angeles wildfires. “When we have severe ⁢storms or a flooding events, the rain is more intense.”

Berkeley Earth ‍calculated that ⁣770 million people — one out of every 12 people on⁣ the planet ‍— experienced record annual heat,with 450 million of them in China. Other record hot spots included much of Australia, northern Africa, the⁢ Arabian peninsula and Antarctica, according to Copernicus.⁢ The continental United⁤ States had its fourth warmest​ year on record, NOAA found.

One major ‌natural factor in ⁤global temperatures is the El Nino/La​ Nina oscillation ⁣— a cyclic warming or cooling of the equatorial Pacific​ that ⁣changes weather across much of the planet. Usually a warm El ​Nino ⁣spikes temperatures and its cool La Nina flip side depresses temperatures.

Last⁤ year there were ‌two weak, cool la Ninas so there was a “big part of the surface of the Earth that’s a little cooler than it ​or else would be and that’s probably gonna tuck⁢ a little ​temperature down just a little bit,” NOAA’s Vose said.

An even warmer future waits

Some forecasts have an El Nino developing this year,but it’s still⁣ murky,meteorologists said. Carlo Buontempo, director of Copernicus’ climate service, said that when the next‌ El Nino materializes, which he expects within the next​ couple of ⁢years, it ⁢will likely drive another record annual temperature.

Several⁣ of the⁣ climate monitoring​ groups are predicting that ⁤2026 will be‌ about as hot as 2025.

Looking ahead, both⁢ Copernicus and Berkeley Earth calculated that 2029 is the likely ⁢date that the planet’s long-term average will ‍breach the 2.7 degree threshold.

“In⁤ a decade’s time when we’re in the 2030s … the number of⁤ extreme events around the‌ world will increase. The cost associated ⁣with the‌ damages and ⁣impacts of those extreme events will⁤ be worse,” Burgess said. “And we will ‌look‌ back to the mild climate of the mid‍ 2020s with nostalgia.”

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